Post by TheFudgeFactory on Jan 12, 2012 11:05:27 GMT -5

What happens if my tee shot lands on a bird's back and he carries it out of bounds but then is attacked by a larger bird who grabs the ball and drops it in the hole? Is that still a hole in one? 'Cause that's how I'm gonna play it.

Post by concertjunkie on Jan 12, 2012 11:14:29 GMT -5

liar misspelled is lyre. Defintion is a musical instrument of ancient Greece consisting of a soundbox made typically from a turtle shell, with two curved arms connected by a yoke from which strings are stretched to the body, used especially to accompany singing and recitation.

Post by cursedlono on Jan 12, 2012 11:19:25 GMT -5

Stanley the Simpelton Pink Floyd actually pre-Floyd Bob Klose was the guitar player before they were signed.

And Klose could be viewed a misspelling Close.

yes this was really weird for a phase I went about collecting all kinds of Pink Floyd bootlegs and solos Syd Barret stuff and I had never heard of this song. Some further Googeling says the song could even possibly be a fake but from listening to it it is him. I do not know if it is two guitar players on it. But I hear some of Syd's type playing.

Post by cursedlono on Jan 12, 2012 11:27:01 GMT -5

"The Abdabs" (also known as "The Screaming Abdabs"), with Roger Waters (lead guitar), Richard Wright (rhythm guitar), Nick Mason (drums), Clive Metcalfe (bass guitar), and Keith Noble & Juliette Gale (vocals), performed rhythm & blues under various names ("Sigma 6", "The Meggadeaths", and the Abdabs variations above) during their run with manager Ken Chapman, who also wrote some early material for the band.

Metcalfe, Noble and Gale left the band (though Gale would go on to marry Richard Wright in 1969). By the time they left, the line-up included Syd Barrett (rhythm guitar and vocals) and Bob Klose (lead guitar and vocals), with Roger Waters on bass and vocals and Richard Wright on organ and vocals. This new group used various names, often fluctuating between "Tea Set" and "The Pink Floyd Sound" (named after two old Carolina bluesmen, Pink Anderson and Floyd Council). The word "Sound" was dropped from the band's name, with the definite article disappearing a few years later.

Klose was more focused on his studies than on the band and was more interested in jazz and blues than Barrett's psychedelia and pop, so he left the band sometime around July 1965. Barrett assumed lead guitar, lead vocals, and the bulk of the songwriting, while Klose went on to become a photographer and print maker.

'While we were at the Poly (Regent Street Polytechnic) we had various people in and out of the band and one particular, very good guitar player Bob Klose. He was really a far better musician than any of the rest of us. But I think he had some exam problems and really felt that he had to apply himself to work, whereas the rest of us were not that conscientious. And so he was sort of out of the band and we were looking for another guitar player and we knew that Syd was coming up to London from Cambridge and so he just, well he was just co-opted into the whole thing.' — Richard Wright[1]Wiki quote

Post by bizco17 on Jan 12, 2012 11:39:36 GMT -5

A stretch, but I'm just brainstorming....

The show Romper Room had a skit teaching kids values. It featured Do-Bees and Don't Bees in reference to something we don’t talk about in here.Hence, Doobie BrothersThey have a song called “What a fool believes”.—Fool is also a synonym for simpletonThe album that song was on also included a song called “How Do the Fools Survive”

Post by sticknick79 on Jan 12, 2012 11:42:46 GMT -5

Simpletons who immediately leap to mind are the three stooges. They were originally Moe, Larry, and Shemp, who was shortly there-after replaced by his brother Curly. Shemp once again stepped in when Curly died. (I think i have the chronology correct.)